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Importance of copepod carcasses versus faecal pellets in the upper water column of an oligotrophic area

Importance of copepod carcasses versus faecal pellets in the upper water column of an oligotrophic area
Importance of copepod carcasses versus faecal pellets in the upper water column of an oligotrophic area
Downward flux of zooplankton faecal pellets and carcasses was studied during and after the spring bloom in an oligotrophic coastal area of the Western Mediterranean using a ‘swimmer-excluding’ sediment trap. Zooplankton detritus retrieved in the trap were comprised of cylindrical faecal pellets (from meso- and macrozooplankton) and copepod carcasses with a respective carbon flux of 0.05–2.69 mg m?2 d?1 and 0.42–4.37 mg m?2 d?1. Carbon and nitrogen flux of carcasses always exceeded that of faecal pellets, except at the beginning of the bloom due to a higher contribution of macrozooplankton faecal material. During the peak of phytoplankton biomass, total faecal flux essentially comprised of copepod faecal pellets (68–86% of the total faecal carbon), whereas before and after this period, macrozooplankton faecal material dominated (88–91% of total faecal carbon flux). Copepod faecal flux was positively correlated with phytoplankton biomass. Estimates of non-predatory biomass mortality rates (from <0.01 to 0.05 d?1) were negatively correlated with chl a with a time lag of 12 days and were lower than predatory mortality values reported in the same area. The paper discusses the relative importance of carcasses versus faecal pellet flux and of non-predatory versus predatory mortality, as well as the potential role of these zooplankton detritus in supporting the production of benthos in oligotrophic areas.
faecal pellets, carcasses, zooplankton, mortality, Mediterranean sea, Oligotrophic area
0272-7714
456-463
Frangoulis, Constantin
65402fcf-2bef-4c70-bd64-f1b8a726ae4f
Skliris, Nikolaos
07af7484-2e14-49aa-9cd3-1979ea9b064e
Lepoint, Gilles
eded571b-3a03-4413-ad9a-b9a88e69a60b
Elkalay, Khalid
a0a84981-09fb-4c31-8e6d-4dba4fd75bc8
Goffart, Anne
550c52f7-339f-40be-a13e-f482c341e491
Pinnegar, John K.
185b6e46-5667-4371-ab54-c54e54839eee
Hecq, Jean-Henri
3a7750f9-32d5-489e-b486-1ca6eb00fd04
Frangoulis, Constantin
65402fcf-2bef-4c70-bd64-f1b8a726ae4f
Skliris, Nikolaos
07af7484-2e14-49aa-9cd3-1979ea9b064e
Lepoint, Gilles
eded571b-3a03-4413-ad9a-b9a88e69a60b
Elkalay, Khalid
a0a84981-09fb-4c31-8e6d-4dba4fd75bc8
Goffart, Anne
550c52f7-339f-40be-a13e-f482c341e491
Pinnegar, John K.
185b6e46-5667-4371-ab54-c54e54839eee
Hecq, Jean-Henri
3a7750f9-32d5-489e-b486-1ca6eb00fd04

Frangoulis, Constantin, Skliris, Nikolaos, Lepoint, Gilles, Elkalay, Khalid, Goffart, Anne, Pinnegar, John K. and Hecq, Jean-Henri (2011) Importance of copepod carcasses versus faecal pellets in the upper water column of an oligotrophic area. Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science, 92 (3), 456-463. (doi:10.1016/j.ecss.2011.02.005).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Downward flux of zooplankton faecal pellets and carcasses was studied during and after the spring bloom in an oligotrophic coastal area of the Western Mediterranean using a ‘swimmer-excluding’ sediment trap. Zooplankton detritus retrieved in the trap were comprised of cylindrical faecal pellets (from meso- and macrozooplankton) and copepod carcasses with a respective carbon flux of 0.05–2.69 mg m?2 d?1 and 0.42–4.37 mg m?2 d?1. Carbon and nitrogen flux of carcasses always exceeded that of faecal pellets, except at the beginning of the bloom due to a higher contribution of macrozooplankton faecal material. During the peak of phytoplankton biomass, total faecal flux essentially comprised of copepod faecal pellets (68–86% of the total faecal carbon), whereas before and after this period, macrozooplankton faecal material dominated (88–91% of total faecal carbon flux). Copepod faecal flux was positively correlated with phytoplankton biomass. Estimates of non-predatory biomass mortality rates (from <0.01 to 0.05 d?1) were negatively correlated with chl a with a time lag of 12 days and were lower than predatory mortality values reported in the same area. The paper discusses the relative importance of carcasses versus faecal pellet flux and of non-predatory versus predatory mortality, as well as the potential role of these zooplankton detritus in supporting the production of benthos in oligotrophic areas.

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More information

Published date: 1 May 2011
Keywords: faecal pellets, carcasses, zooplankton, mortality, Mediterranean sea, Oligotrophic area
Organisations: Physical Oceanography

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 365228
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/365228
ISSN: 0272-7714
PURE UUID: 2c33e10b-916e-4c64-8ce8-cba8d4400e69
ORCID for Nikolaos Skliris: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2473-2586

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 28 May 2014 10:33
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:39

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Contributors

Author: Constantin Frangoulis
Author: Gilles Lepoint
Author: Khalid Elkalay
Author: Anne Goffart
Author: John K. Pinnegar
Author: Jean-Henri Hecq

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